Blagg v. Rutledge

1952 OK 385, 251 P.2d 196, 207 Okla. 559, 1952 Okla. LEXIS 852
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 5, 1952
Docket34382
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1952 OK 385 (Blagg v. Rutledge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blagg v. Rutledge, 1952 OK 385, 251 P.2d 196, 207 Okla. 559, 1952 Okla. LEXIS 852 (Okla. 1952).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This action was instituted by Earl Maybee and Myrtle Kennedy against D. W. Jones and Elsie Maybee, if living and if deceased, the heirs, executors, administrators, devi-sees and assigns of Elsie Maybee, deceased. Thereafter, the petition of Earl Maybee and Myrtle Kennedy was amended making therein Alford Jones, W. Blagg and Elsie Maybee, if living and if she be deceased, her heirs, and the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees and assigns of Elsie Maybee, deceased, defendants.

W. Blagg filed his answer and cross-petition wherein he sought to quiet title to the property involved herein. Leta Rutledge, Marjorie Bennett, Ray Eve-land and Viola Faye Eveland Delozier, sole heirs of Elsie Maybee, by leave of court, intervened in said cause and sought to quiet title to said property. The plaintiffs, who were heirs of R. J. Maybee, deceased husband of Elsie Maybee, dismissed their case without prejudice, and the issues were joined as to the defendants and interveners.

The parties will'be referred to herein as they appeared in the trial court.

On May 1, 1946, Elsie Maybee, who is one and the same person as Mrs. R. J. Maybee and Elsie Van Dike, was the owner of the following described real estate: lots one (1), two (2), three (3), four (4) and five (5) in block one (1) in the Original Town of Sperry, Oklahoma, together with an adjoining acreage 410 feet wide, also in the town of Sperry.

Between the 1st day of May, 1946, and the last day of October, 1946, the defendants together acquired all of the property which was owned by Elsie Maybee, who was then 80 years of age. The conveyances were as follows:

(1) Quit Claim Deed from Elsie May-bee for the four hundred and ten feet was procured for the sum of One Dollar ($1.00),

this being the property which the defendant, Wv Blagg, acquired at tax resale in May, 1946, a few days prior to this quitclaim deed. This property is involved in this case only insofar as the circumstances relating to it affect the credibility of the witnesses.

(2) On July 6, 1946, a lease for 25-years was given Alford Jones by Mrs. R. J. Maybee, covering Lots One (1), Two (2), Three (3), Four (4) and Five (5) herein involved, for an annual rental of Twelve Dollar ($12.00);

this lease was recorded July 19, 1946.

(3) A Warranty Deed dated and acknowledged June 25, 1946, was given to Alford Jones by Elsie Van Dike (Mrs. Maybee) which deed covered the South Thirty (30) feet of Lot Two (2), Block Two (2), herein involved.

This deed was recorded December 6, 1948, which was after the death of Mrs. Maybee. She died November 25, 1948.

(4) There also appears a contract between Elsie Maybee and Alford Jones, dated June 25, 1946, and which purports to give Elsie Maybee the right to live in the said property as long as she lives and specifically referred to the Warranty Deed and farm lease on said property hereinabove mentioned.

This contract was filed for record January 14, 1947, and was acknowledged only by Alford Jones on January 14, 1947. This contract recites both the dates of June 25, 1946, and October 25, 1946.

*561 The deed to Alford Jones, dated June 25, 1946, was acknowledged by Hazel B. Strong, a notary public from Tulsa, Oklahoma, and the sister of Alford Jones, grantee. She also acknowledged the warranty deed from Mrs. Maybee to W. Blagg, covering the north 20 feet of lot two (2), block one (1), and lot one (1), block one (1) of said property.

Likewise, Hazel B. Strong acknowledged the farm lease agreement of July 6, 1946, from Mrs. Maybee to Alford Jones.

The evidence further showed that the two defendants, Alford Jones and W. Blagg, and especially Alford Jones, acted for Mrs. Maybee in paying her taxes, burial association dues, utility bills and in cashing of her checks, and that Blagg took a check of $662.50 and cashed the same for Mrs. Maybee during the time of the negotiations of said property. The check bears the endorsement of both W. Blagg and Elsie May-bee.

The defendants, Blagg and Jones, plaintiffs in error herein, complain that the trial court ignored the rule laid down in the case of Koehen v. Klumen, 191 Okla. 71, 126 P. 2d 1002, as follows:

“The Supreme Court could not disregard the uncontradicted testimony of an unimpeached witness whose testimony was reasonable and was not inherently improbable.”

And, in the case of Warren v. Grif-fing, 200 Okla. 108, 190 P. 2d 1014, the court held:

“Undisputed credible testimony if not inherently improbable is usually binding upon the court or jury, but evidence is not regarded as undisputed if it is at variance with the facts and circumstances in the case, or reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom.”

However, we cannot acquiesce in the position taken by the defendants, Blagg and Jones, that the evidence of the witnesses was unimpeachable and that their testimony was reasonable and was not inherently improbable. It is noted that the defendant Blagg testified that the money was paid to Mrs. Maybee, and the only evidence of such payment was by the defendants, Blagg and Jones. The same is likewise true of the $1,000 allegedly paid to Mrs. Maybee by W. Blagg at the time of the delivery of the deeds to Jones and Blagg. There is no other evidence of the payment of the consideration and it was not paid in the presence of the notary public who took the acknowledgments, at the time the consideration ordinarily would have passed.

Blagg was a man who purchased and dealt in tax titles, and rather than take a deed direct from Mrs. Maybee at the time of the acquisition of the property, he permitted the deed to be delivered to Jones which had theretofore been held by Mrs. Maybee, and then the deed from Jones to Blagg was dated, acknowledged and recorded on December 6, 1948, a few days after the death of Mrs. Maybee. Both Jones and Blagg testified that by reason of Mrs. Maybee being on a pension from the Welfare Department, she did not want the deed of June 25, 1946, recorded, yet the lease and contract were recorded shortly after the date of the respective instruments, which would tend to disprove the statements of Jones and Blagg.

The testimony of the defendants in some respects was contradictory, especially regarding the acknowledgments which were taken by Mrs. Strong, Blagg testifying that the acknowledgment to the Jones deed was taken after October 26, 1946, that is, after he procured the deed to the north 70 feet of said five lots, and the $1,000 consideration paid, while Mrs. Strong, the notary public, testified the acknowledgment was taken on June 25, 1946, the date shown in the acknowledgment and that no consideration was paid in her presence. And, again in connection with the $1,000 which was allegedly paid, the defendant Blagg testified the same was paid with two $500 bills, at the request of Mrs. Maybee, yet no trace was found of what was done with these bills of large denominations.

*562 The learned trial judge was convinced that there was no consideration paid, and believed that the defendants took advantage of the confidence which they knew Mrs. Maybee had in them without the delivery of the purchase price.

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Bluebook (online)
1952 OK 385, 251 P.2d 196, 207 Okla. 559, 1952 Okla. LEXIS 852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blagg-v-rutledge-okla-1952.